Truth and liberation: Rejoinder to brooks, Sassower and Agassi, and Harris
- 1 January 1994
- journal article
- other
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Critical Review
- Vol. 8 (1) , 137-157
- https://doi.org/10.1080/08913819408443329
Abstract
My critics assume that the objectivity of moral truth is contingent on the discovery of some transcendent, nonhuman sanction for human values, but I contend that objective morality is a necessary feature of the situation faced by beings with freedom of choice, just as objective truth is a necessary feature of the situation faced by beings with the freedom to differ in their perceptions of the world around them. Both liberals and postmodernists ignore these necessary aspects of the human condition: liberals, by conferring intrinsic value on the freedom to choose the bad; postmodernists, by conferring intrinsic value on the opinions generated by discourse without regard for their veracity.Keywords
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- After libertarianism: Rejoinder to Narveson, McCloskey, Flew, and MachanCritical Review, 1992
- The crisis of reason in contemporary thought: Some reflections on the arguments of postmodernismCritical Review, 1991
- Postmodernist Bourgeois LiberalismThe Journal of Philosophy, 1983